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Feminist Therapy

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Title: Feminist Therapy


1
Feminist Therapy

2
Questions?
  • What are the differences in terms of gender-role
    socialization for this couple?
  • As a woman or as a man, what kind of messages do
    you receive from people?
  • How do these gender-role expectations impact you
    as a therapist?

3
Key Concepts
  • Problems are viewed in a sociopolitical and
    cultural context
  • The client is the expert in her/his own life
  • Challenge traditional ways of assessing
    psychological health
  • It is assumed that changes in individuals will
    best occur through social change
  • Clients are encouraged to take social actions

4
View of Human Nature
  • Gender-fair
  • Differences between women and men are due to
    socialization processes
  • Flexible-multicultural
  • Apply equally to both individuals and groups
    regardless of age, race, culture, gender, class,
    sexual orientation, and ability.
  • Interactionist
  • Consider contextual and environmental factors
  • Life-span-oriented
  • Human development is a lifelong process and
    change can occur at any time

5
Goals of Feminist Therapy
  • Be aware of their gender-role socialization
    process
  • Identify negative internalized messages and
    replace them with self-enhancing beliefs
  • Understand how sexism and oppression influence
    them in a negative way
  • Help women define themselves instead of defined
    by societal standards (e.g., body image)

6
Goals of Feminist Therapy
  • Help women free from the impact of gender-role
    expectations
  • Men and women are equal
  • Balance self-nurturance and relationship
  • Empowering clients
  • Take actions to change society

7
Therapists function and Role
  • Use gender and power analyses to understand
    clients and their concerns
  • monitor their own biases
  • Commit to understanding oppression and its
    impacts
  • Value being emotionally present for their
    clients, sharing their experiences, and modeling
    proactive behaviors
  • Use techniques from other approaches
  • Hold beliefs in common with humanistic and
    person-centered approach

8
Therapeutic Relationship
  • Therapeutic relationship is not sufficient
  • Therapeutic relationship is empowering and
    egalitarian
  • Model how to identify and use power
  • Use self-disclosure to reduce the power
    differential
  • Honor clients experiences
  • Include clients in the assessment and treatment
    process

9
Intervention Techniques
  • Gender-role analysis
  • To help clients understand the impact of
    gender-role expectations in their lives
  • Gender-role intervention
  • Provides clients with insight into ways on how
    social issues affect their problems

10
Intervention Techniques
  • Power analysis
  • Emphasize on the power differences between men
    and women in society
  • Power intervention
  • Help clients appreciate themselves as they are
    and gain self-confidence

11
Intervention Techniques
  • Self-disclosure
  • Use therapeutic self-disclosure to equalize the
    therapeutic relationship, normalize experience,
    or provide modeling for the client
  • Bibliotherapy
  • Self-help books, videos, or films can be used as
    bibliotherapy resources.
  • To increase clients expertise and decrease power
    differential between the therapist and the client

12
Intervention Techniques
  • Reframing
  • A shift from blaming oneself to looking at
    society for an explanation.
  • Re-labeling
  • Changes the label or evaluation applied to the
    client's behavioral characteristics
  • Re-labeling depression as reactions to external
    standard instead of being unattractive

13
Intervention Techniques
  • Assertiveness training
  • Increase womens awareness of their interpersonal
    rights
  • Assertiveness refers to standing up for ones
    right without violating others rights.

14
Research on Feminist Therapy
  • Very little research
  • Feminist group therapy (Johnson, 1976)
  • group cohesiveness, interpersonal learning, and
    finding that the therapist is a competent woman
    are considered the most helpful factors in
    improvement
  • Research indicated that women in feminist therapy
    are more likely to
  • have radical political views
  • identify themselves as members of the womens
    movement
  • Research indicated that therapists in feminist
    therapy are more likely to
  • use self-disclosure
  • create an egalitarian relationship

15
Summary Evaluation-contribution
  • Have the most in common with multicultural
    perspectives
  • Direct actions for social change
  • Recognize sexism, racism, and other forms of
    oppression
  • Pay attentions to gender-role socialization,
    power issues in relationship, and external
    environmental factors.
  • The principles and techniques of feminist therapy
    can be incorporated into other therapy models

16
Summary Evaluation--limitations
  • Avoid imposing their values on their clients
  • Focus on contextual or environmental factors and
    move away from exploring the inner factors (both
    a strength and a limitation)
  • Is it a theory?---this is a debatable question
  • Developed by White, middle-class, heterosexual
    women---therefore it may be biased
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